
Near and Distant Neighbors
A New History of Soviet Intelligence
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Narrated by:
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Shaun Grindell
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By:
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Jonathan Haslam
About this listen
Previous histories have focused on the KGB, leaving military intelligence and the special service - which specialized in codes and ciphers - lurking in the shadows. Drawing on previously neglected Russian sources, Haslam reveals how both were in fact crucial to the survival of the Soviet state. This was especially true after Stalin's death in 1953, as the Cold War heated up and dedicated Communist agents the regime had relied upon - Klaus Fuchs, the Rosenbergs, Donald Maclean - were betrayed.
In the wake of these failures, Khrushchev and his successors discarded ideological recruitment in favor of blackmail and bribery. The tactical turn was so successful that we can draw only one conclusion: the West ultimately triumphed despite, not because of, the espionage war. In bringing to light the obscure inhabitants of an undercover intelligence world, Haslam offers a surprising and unprecedented portrayal of Soviet success that is not only fascinating but also essential to understanding Vladimir Putin's power today.
©2015 Jonathan Haslam (P)2015 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
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What listeners say about Near and Distant Neighbors
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- Donald J. Sage
- 03-19-16
Terrible Narrator
He uses a variety of upspeak by emphasizing words having no relationship to the meaning of the text.
Very annoying
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- Izchuzchiy
- 07-20-17
Good book horrible narrator
The book was good and deep considering the dearth of sources regarding the topic. However, this narrator was horrible and robotic in his delivery. Struggling to pronounce Russian names and places, choppy and didn't flow well.
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- Alex
- 12-22-15
Horrendous performance, interesting material
The reader is beyond bad. There are no sentences, just clipped single words read in a machine like monotone. This makes it extremely difficult to absorb the meaning. Listen to the sammoke before purchasing.
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- James A. Bretney
- 09-04-17
Narration not good
You have to be very familiar with Soviet Espionage History to keep up. His insights are some what esoteric. The narration of this book is very distracting.
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- NW
- 02-25-21
Skip the audiobook and buy a print copy.
A fascinating book so far but four chapters in and I am compelled to abandon the audiobook.
The narration is atrocious.
The. Narrator obviously. Gra-du-ated. From. The. William. Shatner. School of. Voice. Acting.
The prosody is nearly impossible to listen to. At 1.5x speed you can begin to push past the broken rhythm but I spent more time struggling against the narration then absorbing the content.
How a publisher could ever think to release an audiobook in this style is incomprehensible to me. That the narrator is even able to obtain work as a voice actor is equally incomprehensible.
This is a shame as it hardely does justice to the actual book. I will be buying a print copy.
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- bergwerk
- 03-17-24
Detailed, too much
Reads more like an extended dissertation, with lots of scholarly detail. Not the most lucid telling and some of the detail seems like it should be in a footnote. The accent of the reader doesn’t stand up well to increased playback speed or background noise
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- Josh
- 11-14-22
Why is he narrating this like it’s a secret or a mystery?
The information is interesting and the cadence is fine for the written material.
The narration, however, is abysmal. Why on earth he made the choice to read as though it’s a mystery or something similar is beyond me. Super takes away from the non-fiction subject and makes it out to be more of a young adults mystery novel. Just horrible.
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- Troy
- 05-21-17
Horrid monotone audio. I hate giving bad reviews. The has no chance of being worse than this audio.
Argh blah blah blad very blad bad reader can not pronounce Russian names. Ouch
Bookhas to be better
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- Andy from SoCal
- 01-06-16
Narration Makes This Book Hard Work
What could have made this a 4 or 5-star listening experience for you?
The narration really got in the way of the story: choppy and disjointed. It combined the worst of Christopher Walken's phrasing with up-talk from a Valley girl. I think the narrator got paid extra to insert random pregnant pauses and commas throughout the text. I just couldn't finish the book because it was so difficult to listen to.
What could Jonathan Haslam have done to make this a more enjoyable book for you?
I think the book was meant to be read silently to oneself, the phrasing and use of parenthetical asides hurt the ability of the narrator to tell the story in a compelling way.
Who would you have cast as narrator instead of Shaun Grindell?
Lots of British narrators would have done a good job, for example Frederick Davidson.
You didn’t love this book... but did it have any redeeming qualities?
It's a very interesting story and I might buy the physical book but it is impossible for me to keep engaged in the audio book.
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- Lars
- 04-27-17
The narrator is a machine!
What would have made Near and Distant Neighbors better?
I feel ripped-off after buying this audio book. I didn't know that audible allowed this kind of machine readings
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